Bull's smile prompts an answering one from Dorian, one that lingers around his lips as he speaks. "Wanted some time alone with your thoughts? I quite understand." But Bull's had his alone time. Dorian is here now, and he isn't going anywhere short of being told to.
There's some strange magnetism about him. He enjoyed Bull's company before they began sleeping together--for the most part--but these days, he finds himself wanting to be around him constantly. He should, perhaps, be concerned about this compulsion, but Bull doesn't seem to mind his presence. In fact, he always seems happy to see Dorian, no matter how little time they've been apart. They snip at each other still, of course--or rather, Dorian does, and Bull teases him--but it's the sort of friendly banter and flirting they've developed over the course of the last several months. When they're alone, Dorian even allows it to edge into the sort of suggestive territory he would have balked at before. Whatever it is that's happening between them, it's fun.
Dorian eats slowly, lets his gaze drift from Bull to the horizon. The desert seems peaceful, though he's heard stories from scouts about the creatures that roam the dunes in the moonlight. He has no real desire to see for himself, but he'll have little choice in the matter.
Bull will never really confess it, but there are days when he feels the strain of being around so many people that, fundamentally, aren't like him. There will always be people - humans, dwarves, elves - that have never seen a Qunari or Tal-Vashoth in person. There will always be people that stare or are brave enough to ask invasive questions. As far as the lower ranks of the Inquisition are concerned, he's Tal-Vashoth. In some ways that helps; in others, it doesn't. He still feels like a curiosity. It's better when he's around people that are used to him.
Like Dorian.
"Different kind of wide open than the grasslands, huh?" he remarks, looking out at the far horizon and the mountains that are made small by the great, sweeping openness of the sky. In the grasslands it was all flat, nothing for scale. But he knows those are far-away mountains.
"It's different," Dorian agrees, and spends another long minute considering the expanse of empty terrain. Whereas at least the grasslands had plants and animals aplenty, in the desert there are no visible signs of life at all. Just sand and rocks. "Difficult to imagine anything living out there. It looks desolate," he comments idly.
They're sitting on separate rocks, just enough space between them that if Dorian made an effort, he could nudge Bull's foot with his. He wishes, suddenly, that he'd sat down nearer. But he's not about to get up and move. That would be an embarrassing admission if ever there was one. Instead he regards Bull as he contemplates loneliness, and wonders if Bull ever feels as alone here as he does himself at times. It's been better, lately, having someone he's close to who understands him and where he comes from far better than these southerners could, even if they come from diametrically opposing cultures.
Bull looks at the same landscape and in his mind he hears the teachings he's taken to heart his entire life. He considers a moment, because there is little he does regarding the Qun that does not have some consideration. After a moment, he recites:
"Tonight, in the desert, with emptiness all around - the sky, endless, the earth, desolate - before my eyes the contradiction opened like a night-blooming flower. Emptiness is an illusion. Beneath my feet, grains of sand beyond counting. Above my head, a sea of stars. Alone, they are small: a faint and flickering light in the darkness, a lost and fallen fragment of earth."
He's been speaking out to the landscape beyond them, but now he turns his head to look at Dorian.
"Alone, they make the emptiness real. Together, they are the bones of the world."
Dorian is startled when Bull begins to speak in an even, almost somber tone, the kind used when reciting something of gravity or importance. His obvious surprise only grows as Bull continues. It sounds like poetry. Dorian has no doubt that Bull, intelligent as he is, has a knack for memorization. One would almost have to in order to be successful in a job like his. But he'd never have suspected he'd spend time on something like this; almost an incantation.
His eyes lock with Bull's, and he feels unmistakably as though he's just been trusted with something; shown something significant.
"What is that?" He asks softly, curious. The words are beautiful, simple but evocative, and perfectly suited to the landscape spread out before them. They give even that emptiness meaning, urge him to feel connected to it in a way that Dorian would never have previously considered. "It's lovely."
Bull can’t help the small smile that appears. He takes a bite of the stew Dorian brought him, letting the suspense build a bit.
“It’s from the Body Canto,” he says at last. “Of the Qun.”
Bull has heard every assumption and stereotype about the Qun and the Qunari; one of the most pervasive ones is that there is no room for craftsmanship, creativity, or beauty in the Qun and so naturally its followers would have no appreciation for these things.
He finds it insulting but it is not a surprise. That they all must be savage brutes makes believing in the rightness of the Chantry easier.
It is probably abundantly clear, from the way Dorian had treated Bull closer to the beginning of their acquaintance, that Dorian was one of the people who believed in those stereotypes. Being from Tevinter--and from the Eastern Imperium especially--he's been hearing propaganda about Qunari all his life. It is only his expanding knowledge of the world and his growing friendship with Bull that has caused him to reconsider the things he thought to be true about Qunari as a people, and the Qun itself.
It is probably also quite clear that despite a number of reformed opinions and a much more open mind, Dorian still hadn't considered right up until this moment that the Qun itself could have artistic merit. His mild surprise turns to shock, which melts quickly to embarrassment at his own apparent ignorance. Of course the philosophy of an entire people couldn't simply be rote and prosaic and stark, as he's always been led to believe. How would anyone find meaning in it? How would anyone believe?
"I had no idea," he murmurs, "that the Qun could be so..." He looks at Bull, struggling to find the correct word. "Profound," he settles on. "I should have considered it more before now." He wants to reach out and take Bull's hand. "I'm sorry." He realizes that he was right; he had been trusted with something. It makes him feel closer to Bull, to be allowed to hear this--to know this...tenant of his people. To know what he takes from it. Dorian sets his bowl aside, half-finished. "If it's all written like that, I daresay I'd like to hear more."
Bull hasn’t expected or been looking for an apology, but that Dorian offers one feels profound. Not many people apologize to him for getting anything about the Qunari wrong. Most of them, if they say anything at all, brush off revelations with a laugh, as if Bull is a curious exception. And, for the most part, many people never get to see what he’s just shown Dorian. Bull didn’t care if they understood him or his people. But Dorian—
He lifts the mage’s hand and gently kisses the back of it. If he wants to hear more, Bull can give him that.
“Solitude is illusion. Alone in the darkness, I was surrounded on all sides. The starlight dripped from the petals of cactus flowers, a chorus of insects sang across the dunes. How much abundance the world carries if every fistful of sand is an eternity of mountains.”
Bull relaxes back against the still-warm rock behind him and looks out at the moonlit desert again. He doesn’t let go of Dorian’s hand, though it briefly occurs to him that he might want to keep eating.
“The Qun isn’t for everyone,” he says quietly. “Like any belief or way of life. But it brings me peace.”
Maker. Has anyone actually kissed the back of his hand like that before? It's both affectionate and strangely chivalrous, and Dorian thinks that he probably shouldn't like it as much as he does. He's enraptured as Bull continues his recitation; Dorian's always appreciated his voice, and the imagery is stunning. He can understand the message being conveyed. It's no wonder these words would mean something to so many; to the Bull, even. Dorian doesn't even contemplate pulling his hand away. In fact, he gets up and moves, despite his earlier hesitation to do just that. He sits down at Bull's side, and while he doesn't lean into him, their thighs press together, and Dorian interlaces their fingers.
"If it helps you, I'm glad," Dorian says, and is surprised by how much he means it. "It's beautiful, Bull." Surely he can appreciate that much, and what Bull derives from it. Dorian is under no illusion that the Qun is all poetry and contemplation, either; not when he knows that if he lived under it himself, his mouth would be sewn shut at best. But he'd never stopped to think that it might have any nuance, that it might be helpful to some as much as it is harmful to others. As Bull says, much like any system of belief.
When Dorian looks out at the desert again, lit silver, he sees possibility rather than emptiness. He has to admit that it's an encouraging point of view. "I'd like to know more," he finds himself saying. "About your people. So much of what I've been taught is wrong, or badly skewed. I don't enjoy being so ignorant."
"It does," he says with a small nod. "As much as the Chant of Light helps Andrastians, I assume."
The request doesn't entirely surprise him. Dorian is the sort of person that wants to have proper information at his fingertips, not rumors or nonsense. And he hates to be less than knowledgeable.
"What do you want to know?" He appreciates Dorian's curiosity, that it's driven by a true desire to know and understand rather than one to confirm misgivings or look for scandal or strangeness.
"Should I start at the beginning? Or with philosophy?"
He doesn't mind talking about the Qun or his life as part of it. He doesn't bring it up mostly because he doesn't want people to think he's trying to convert anyone. That isn't his job. On the off-chance that he does run into someone that wants to, he makes sure they get safe passage to one of the few colonies on the northern coast of the continent. The tamassrans there will take them or send them on to Par Vollen.
Dorian appreciates that Bull is willing to indulge him. He looks up at him now, at the way the moonlight casts over his grey skin so that it almost looks metallic, at the shadows on his face, at the indulgent curl of his lips and the kindness in his eye.
He remembers a time not so long ago where he was convinced that Bull would eventually stab him in the back. He's been lucky enough since then to learn about the Iron Bull as a person, rather than just a Qunari, and that notion was dispelled. Now, conversely, he wants very much to learn about Bull as a Qunari.
"Not the beginning," Dorian says, half laughing. "I'm afraid I don't have much interest in Koslun. What I want to know is how your people live today. What's important to them." Important to you, is what he thinks, because he can't fool himself into thinking that he's not invested in Bull's opinion most of all. "I want to know what it is that works for you," he admits. Because he wants to know Bull better, wants to understand him.
Bull laughs quietly. "I'm not qualified to go all the way back to Koslun," he admits with a grin. His thumb brushes over the back of Dorian's hand. "I meant my childhood. Growing up under the Qun."
But he can start where Dorian asks. It takes him a moment to get his thoughts in order, if only because he isn't a priest or tamassran - it was never part of his job to teach the Qun to other people. He knows more than the average soldier in the Beresaad, but that's not difficult.
"Everything and everyone has a nature and these things come together in the proper order," he says to start. "Asit tal-eb - it is to be. Understanding the nature of a thing gives you more insight into the world itself and your place in it. Trying to oppose your nature only leads to discord and struggle. And when you struggle against yourself, you disrupt the whole."
Bull pauses, not entirely sure he's answering Dorian's question.
"Someone like me is no more or less important than a farmer or a soldier or the Ariqun. We live knowing that the purpose we serve is important. There is nothing too high or too low - all of it is necessary and every person is respected and appreciated for what they do."
Asit tal-eb. He's certain he's heard Bull say those words before. God to have the translation. It doesn't much matter if he's answering his question directly, because Dorian is nodding anyway, absorbing the information he's given. It reflects what he knows about the major philosophy of the Qun already, for the most part. Good that he'd had the fundamentals straight, at least.
But that structure can't work for everyone, he thinks, though he doesn't say it. Bull already knows that very well, given how many Tal-Vashoth he'd dealt with during his career in Seheron.
What Dorian simply can't pass up is the chance to learn more about Bull's childhood. "What were you like as a child?" He asks, curiosity and amusement making his eyes bright, lips curling in a smile that is, despite himself, nothing short of fond.
"Big," he quips, lolling his head to look down at Dorian. "I liked to knock things over. But I also helped to look after younger or smaller kids in my cohort. Our tamassran started calling me Ashkaari... I can't remember how old I was."
Old enough to know that having a title other than imkaari was special. Old enough to feel like he wanted to live up to her expectations and hopes.
"She had me pegged for the army early on, but she told me this story that changed her mind. She told me I couldn't go play until I ate three more things off my plate and all that was left was vegetables. I made her promise me and then put three pieces of meat I'd hidden back on the plate. I ate them and ran off."
He smiles at the memory of hearing it again and the laugh in her voice as she told it.
"That was when she knew I was too smart to be a soldier. Willing to follow the letter of the law but not the spirit when it suited me."
Dorian snorts lightly. Big seems a given. He'll file Ashkaari away for later, as he's distracted by Bull's stories of his youth. Even back then he'd been taking care of others. That doesn't surprise him at all, and he nearly says so. But of course, he chooses to tease him instead. "So you're saying that you became part of the Ben-Hassrath because you were contrary? That does sound like you."
He squeezes Bull's hand lightly, affectionately, and chances leaning a little into his side. Bull's smile is encouraging, and puts him in a lighter mood. "Your tamassran--how long were you with her before you moved on? Did you see her at all after?" He's curious as to whether the Qun would allow that sort of lingering familial bond. Because the way Bull talks about her, she wasn't just his nanny. She might as well have been a parent.
"Something like that. I would have been a good soldier in theory - I'm big even for a Qunari and violence doesn't bother me. But... I'm not--" Bull laughs. "She'd never have said this, but I'm not dense enough. Men that end up in the Antaam and the Beresaad don't have questions, they just follow orders. Most of them don't even learn a second language. Which is kind of rough when you consider that they're supposed to be the eyes, ears, legs, arms, and hands of our people, everything you need to interact with the rest of the world. Not always a great first impression."
He thinks, briefly, of Kirkwall. What a mess. Bull smiles though as he thinks about his tamassran.
"We had two," he admits. "But I was closer to the younger one. I was with her from birth until they sent me off for training, but I still saw her fairly frequently until I went to Seheron. I wrote to her. I saw her briefly when I was sent back, before they reassigned me to the south."
He remembers hoping that she would never be assigned to any of the colonies on Seheron. Bull still writes to her, though not as often, if only to keep track of her whereabouts. It comforts him to know that she is safe and that in some part of the world, things make sense.
Bull seems different as he talks about this. Lighter, somehow. Like this is something he's wanted to share for some time, but never had the chance. It pleases Dorian to see him this way, smiling and laughing, especially after how pensive he'd looked. It's clear that Bull misses the woman who'd raised him, but also that talking about her is something of a relief. Dorian isn't sure he's ever had anyone he feels that way about. Felix, perhaps.
He nods along, rubs a thumb across Bull's knuckles. A small gesture of comfort. It's difficult to miss someone you won't see again.
"And how long was it?" He asks. "Before you were sent off for training? Is it the same age for everyone, or do you all get dispersed depending upon how well-prepared you are?" If Dorian really thought about it, he's certain he could ask a thousand questions about Qunari life--about Bull's life, in particular. He can't help but wonder how many people know even this much about him. "Did they know right away what sort of job you'd have with the Ben-Hassrath?"
"It's a little different for everyone. If tamassrans have you figured out early, they might encourage you to try games that will help you develop skills for a future job. Memory games, chess, puzzles. I think I was fifteen or sixteen when I went to the Ben-Hassrath and the real training started. They try you at different things to see where you fit, then once they have you squared away, training starts in earnest. It's two or three years of that and shadowing someone that is doing the job you'll someday do. Then I went off to Seheron."
His superiors saw what he was good at and made extensive notes on what he could do, what value he could bring, to a place like Seheron. His ability to get along with people, the way he gathers information, remembers it, uses it. His leadership skills and his willingness to work around hard rules when he needs to. His dedication to the Qun and his people. All of it worked together to get him to where he is.
"Antaam and Ben-Hassrath kids are usually that age when we go off. Bakers, cooks, farmers, craftspeople - they all get apprenticeships when they're a little younger."
Dorian remains silent, but nods to show his understanding. It's logical, of course, which he supposes is how the Qun runs itself. Everything makes sense, is efficient, fits seamlessly into place. Every person, too. Ideally, at least.
But Seheron at such a young age--Bull couldn't have been far past twenty when he first set foot on the island with his assignment. It makes Dorian's stomach churn to think of. At that age he'd been getting blind drunk in brothels, having sex anywhere and with any man he wanted, willfully engaging in duels, and making a general ass of himself. Seheron was barely on the periphery of his awareness, something he only thought about when the subject cropped up at particularly boring dinners.
He feels, not for the first time, a great deal of shame on behalf of the spoiled little shit he'd been. Bull had been fighting for his life and his sanity while Dorian wasted money on drink, complained about the intelligence of his peers, and then sucked them off anyway in back rooms and dark hallways, only to pretend afterward that they'd never been introduced. His father deserved it, of course, every embarrassment he'd caused him; but these days, Dorian can't look back and actually like that pompous, ignorant young man. But he can learn from him, at least. Be better.
"You were so young," he says quietly, looks up at Bull with plain sympathy and more than a little concern, though the latter is two decades too late. "And they decided that you were the man they wanted on the ground in that shithole?"
"When I was still technically in training, I carried out work in Par Vollen. That's where I became Hissrad," he admits. "People assumed that because I was big, I was a guard or something, not Ben-Hassrath. Because I found it so easy to be straightforward, they thought me stupid. People will tell you a lot of things when they believe that."
Bull smiles faintly. "I did well. Uncovered a few smuggling operations, found discontents. Rooted out a whole Tevinter spy ring. That's what got me posted to Seheron. They needed someone intelligent enough to find spies, charming enough to win over natives, and-- brutal. Someone that could survive. I guess I was twenty one? Wasn't hard to rise through the ranks. I was good at my job and people died or got reassigned to avoid real burn out."
He was good. An unshakable comrade, a ruthless hunter, fair with the natives, and sharply clever.
"Usual tour of duty is two years. I was there for about eight." Bull looks down at his hands, one holding Dorian's and the other missing a couple of fingertips. "Kind of liked it when the Vints showed up every year. Made things feel straightforward."
Fighting Tevinter soldiers and mages was its own kind of hell, but at least Bull knew who he enemy was in those incursions.
Of course he was good. If Dorian hadn't known right from the start that Bull was Ben-Hassrath, he likely would have fallen for Bull's cover, too. He's learned to use people's expectations--their prejudices--to serve his own ends. The Iron Bull is huge, jovial, loud. He loves to drink, fuck, and fight. While Dorian knows that Bull genuinely does enjoy these things, it's also the perfect cover. No one would ever suspect him of duplicity. Not the big, dumb oxman. Few would even think him capable.
But to hear of the extent of Bull's successful career with the Ben-Hassrath is sobering. Dorian has known for quite some time now that the Bull must be one of the most intelligent men he's ever known; it's one of his most attractive qualities, right up there with the mass of his biceps. This only serves to confirm that assumption--as well as the assumption that his long tour of duty on Seheron had been the exception rather than the rule. It's difficult to fathom what he must have had to endure there in all the time.
Instead of broaching that depressing topic, he asks another question.
"Hissrad?" Dorian repeats the unfamiliar word, brow furrowing. "Is that your...title? Under the Qun?" He's never heard it, if Bull has any other name apart from the Iron Bull. But he must, he realizes. Or at least, he must in so far as Qunari have things they call one another.
"Something like that." Bull hasn't met anyone else with that particular title, but he wouldn't have considered it a nickname, either. It's descriptive enough to give people an idea of who he is and what he does if they know it. "Keeper of illusions," he translates.
Liar something in him whispers. As apt a translation as any. Maybe less refined. Bull doesn't use it if he has a choice. He doesn't lie. He lets people believe what they want to. It's different. It's easy to get caught lying; less easy to be caught playing along with what people already assume is true.
"I got it while I was still in Par Vollen. For a while I didn't really have anything. My tama called me Ashkaari but that means someone who knows, and everyone in the Ben-Hassrath knows things. Not enough to serve as a differentiation."
Keeper of illusions. The translation lingers in Dorian's mind like tendrils of smoke, obscuring a more literal meaning. It's accurate enough, he supposes.
Their fingers are still wound together, palms flat. Himself and--Ashkaari, Hissrad, the Iron Bull. Maker, that's a lot to keep up with. He knows, at least, the he doesn't want to let go. That will have to be enough.
"You've had a number of descriptive monikers, it seems," Dorian comments. "So have I, I suppose, but only one of them is my name." He smiles faintly. "I'm sure it comes as no surprise, but for you, I like the Iron Bull best." He squeezes Bull's hand, leaning into him as he tilts his chin up. For a fleeting moment he wonders if he could chance a kiss here. He wants to. Wants to communicate to Bull how much he cares for him exactly as he is, and how grateful he is that he's shared these things with him. Dorian isn't the sort to say such things plainly. But he thinks that a kiss may not be right, either. There's something almost selfish about that desire, and he doesn't want to examine it too closely.
Ashkaari, Hissrad, the Bull - all the same man, or at least, Bull hopes they are.
He smiles small and shrugs one shoulder when Dorian points out the titles he'd gone through. "I couldn't stay Hissrad when I came here," he admits. "He's known in Seheron and if I waltzed around Orlais using that name, someone would put the pieces together eventually. Especially Tevinter agents. Besides, all Tal-Vashoth pick a name for themselves. It's an important part of breaking with the Qun."
Some days Bull worries that he has been The Iron Bull too long. He writes letters to Par Vollen with perfect devotion because he knows what his people have done for him. He is not a traitor. He is not Tal-Vashoth.
But the Bull is just another title. He comforts himself in that, even if he had to choose it for himself.
He looks down at Dorian and he can't help but smile when he sees the look on the mage's face. Bull leans down to give him a kiss, lingering until he feels Dorian start to pull away.
"Qunari don't have names. But I can see the appeal."
The Bull really is good. Something in what he sees in Dorian's face makes him lean down to kiss him, just as Dorian had been contemplating it. Even so it's something of a shock. There's the overwhelming urge to pull away immediately. He hadn't looked around, hadn't checked, he doesn't know who might be watching, seeing this. But he doesn't. He makes himself return the kiss for the space of a heartbeat at least before breaking it, sitting back and slipping from Bull's grip to clasp his hands nervously in his lap. He resists the urge to look over his shoulder, but only barely.
To distract himself, Dorian picks up his bowl again. What's left of his dinner is colder than he'd like, but a small fire rune drawn on the side of the bowl fixes that quickly enough. When the stew is steaming again, he raises a spoonful to his mouth.
"But you've got one," he points out, tries for lighthearted without being blithe. "Or am I mistaken? Should I stop moaning Bull in bed?" His smirk is as teasing as it is provocative.
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There's some strange magnetism about him. He enjoyed Bull's company before they began sleeping together--for the most part--but these days, he finds himself wanting to be around him constantly. He should, perhaps, be concerned about this compulsion, but Bull doesn't seem to mind his presence. In fact, he always seems happy to see Dorian, no matter how little time they've been apart. They snip at each other still, of course--or rather, Dorian does, and Bull teases him--but it's the sort of friendly banter and flirting they've developed over the course of the last several months. When they're alone, Dorian even allows it to edge into the sort of suggestive territory he would have balked at before. Whatever it is that's happening between them, it's fun.
Dorian eats slowly, lets his gaze drift from Bull to the horizon. The desert seems peaceful, though he's heard stories from scouts about the creatures that roam the dunes in the moonlight. He has no real desire to see for himself, but he'll have little choice in the matter.
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Bull will never really confess it, but there are days when he feels the strain of being around so many people that, fundamentally, aren't like him. There will always be people - humans, dwarves, elves - that have never seen a Qunari or Tal-Vashoth in person. There will always be people that stare or are brave enough to ask invasive questions. As far as the lower ranks of the Inquisition are concerned, he's Tal-Vashoth. In some ways that helps; in others, it doesn't. He still feels like a curiosity. It's better when he's around people that are used to him.
Like Dorian.
"Different kind of wide open than the grasslands, huh?" he remarks, looking out at the far horizon and the mountains that are made small by the great, sweeping openness of the sky. In the grasslands it was all flat, nothing for scale. But he knows those are far-away mountains.
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They're sitting on separate rocks, just enough space between them that if Dorian made an effort, he could nudge Bull's foot with his. He wishes, suddenly, that he'd sat down nearer. But he's not about to get up and move. That would be an embarrassing admission if ever there was one. Instead he regards Bull as he contemplates loneliness, and wonders if Bull ever feels as alone here as he does himself at times. It's been better, lately, having someone he's close to who understands him and where he comes from far better than these southerners could, even if they come from diametrically opposing cultures.
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"Tonight, in the desert, with emptiness all around - the sky, endless, the earth, desolate - before my eyes the contradiction opened like a night-blooming flower. Emptiness is an illusion. Beneath my feet, grains of sand beyond counting. Above my head, a sea of stars. Alone, they are small: a faint and flickering light in the darkness, a lost and fallen fragment of earth."
He's been speaking out to the landscape beyond them, but now he turns his head to look at Dorian.
"Alone, they make the emptiness real. Together, they are the bones of the world."
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His eyes lock with Bull's, and he feels unmistakably as though he's just been trusted with something; shown something significant.
"What is that?" He asks softly, curious. The words are beautiful, simple but evocative, and perfectly suited to the landscape spread out before them. They give even that emptiness meaning, urge him to feel connected to it in a way that Dorian would never have previously considered. "It's lovely."
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“It’s from the Body Canto,” he says at last. “Of the Qun.”
Bull has heard every assumption and stereotype about the Qun and the Qunari; one of the most pervasive ones is that there is no room for craftsmanship, creativity, or beauty in the Qun and so naturally its followers would have no appreciation for these things.
He finds it insulting but it is not a surprise. That they all must be savage brutes makes believing in the rightness of the Chantry easier.
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It is probably also quite clear that despite a number of reformed opinions and a much more open mind, Dorian still hadn't considered right up until this moment that the Qun itself could have artistic merit. His mild surprise turns to shock, which melts quickly to embarrassment at his own apparent ignorance. Of course the philosophy of an entire people couldn't simply be rote and prosaic and stark, as he's always been led to believe. How would anyone find meaning in it? How would anyone believe?
"I had no idea," he murmurs, "that the Qun could be so..." He looks at Bull, struggling to find the correct word. "Profound," he settles on. "I should have considered it more before now." He wants to reach out and take Bull's hand. "I'm sorry." He realizes that he was right; he had been trusted with something. It makes him feel closer to Bull, to be allowed to hear this--to know this...tenant of his people. To know what he takes from it. Dorian sets his bowl aside, half-finished. "If it's all written like that, I daresay I'd like to hear more."
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He lifts the mage’s hand and gently kisses the back of it. If he wants to hear more, Bull can give him that.
“Solitude is illusion. Alone in the darkness, I was surrounded on all sides. The starlight dripped from the petals of cactus flowers, a chorus of insects sang across the dunes. How much abundance the world carries if every fistful of sand is an eternity of mountains.”
Bull relaxes back against the still-warm rock behind him and looks out at the moonlit desert again. He doesn’t let go of Dorian’s hand, though it briefly occurs to him that he might want to keep eating.
“The Qun isn’t for everyone,” he says quietly. “Like any belief or way of life. But it brings me peace.”
He looks side-long at Dorian.
“It isn’t all regiment and control.”
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"If it helps you, I'm glad," Dorian says, and is surprised by how much he means it. "It's beautiful, Bull." Surely he can appreciate that much, and what Bull derives from it. Dorian is under no illusion that the Qun is all poetry and contemplation, either; not when he knows that if he lived under it himself, his mouth would be sewn shut at best. But he'd never stopped to think that it might have any nuance, that it might be helpful to some as much as it is harmful to others. As Bull says, much like any system of belief.
When Dorian looks out at the desert again, lit silver, he sees possibility rather than emptiness. He has to admit that it's an encouraging point of view. "I'd like to know more," he finds himself saying. "About your people. So much of what I've been taught is wrong, or badly skewed. I don't enjoy being so ignorant."
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The request doesn't entirely surprise him. Dorian is the sort of person that wants to have proper information at his fingertips, not rumors or nonsense. And he hates to be less than knowledgeable.
"What do you want to know?" He appreciates Dorian's curiosity, that it's driven by a true desire to know and understand rather than one to confirm misgivings or look for scandal or strangeness.
"Should I start at the beginning? Or with philosophy?"
He doesn't mind talking about the Qun or his life as part of it. He doesn't bring it up mostly because he doesn't want people to think he's trying to convert anyone. That isn't his job. On the off-chance that he does run into someone that wants to, he makes sure they get safe passage to one of the few colonies on the northern coast of the continent. The tamassrans there will take them or send them on to Par Vollen.
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He remembers a time not so long ago where he was convinced that Bull would eventually stab him in the back. He's been lucky enough since then to learn about the Iron Bull as a person, rather than just a Qunari, and that notion was dispelled. Now, conversely, he wants very much to learn about Bull as a Qunari.
"Not the beginning," Dorian says, half laughing. "I'm afraid I don't have much interest in Koslun. What I want to know is how your people live today. What's important to them." Important to you, is what he thinks, because he can't fool himself into thinking that he's not invested in Bull's opinion most of all. "I want to know what it is that works for you," he admits. Because he wants to know Bull better, wants to understand him.
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But he can start where Dorian asks. It takes him a moment to get his thoughts in order, if only because he isn't a priest or tamassran - it was never part of his job to teach the Qun to other people. He knows more than the average soldier in the Beresaad, but that's not difficult.
"Everything and everyone has a nature and these things come together in the proper order," he says to start. "Asit tal-eb - it is to be. Understanding the nature of a thing gives you more insight into the world itself and your place in it. Trying to oppose your nature only leads to discord and struggle. And when you struggle against yourself, you disrupt the whole."
Bull pauses, not entirely sure he's answering Dorian's question.
"Someone like me is no more or less important than a farmer or a soldier or the Ariqun. We live knowing that the purpose we serve is important. There is nothing too high or too low - all of it is necessary and every person is respected and appreciated for what they do."
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But that structure can't work for everyone, he thinks, though he doesn't say it. Bull already knows that very well, given how many Tal-Vashoth he'd dealt with during his career in Seheron.
What Dorian simply can't pass up is the chance to learn more about Bull's childhood. "What were you like as a child?" He asks, curiosity and amusement making his eyes bright, lips curling in a smile that is, despite himself, nothing short of fond.
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Old enough to know that having a title other than imkaari was special. Old enough to feel like he wanted to live up to her expectations and hopes.
"She had me pegged for the army early on, but she told me this story that changed her mind. She told me I couldn't go play until I ate three more things off my plate and all that was left was vegetables. I made her promise me and then put three pieces of meat I'd hidden back on the plate. I ate them and ran off."
He smiles at the memory of hearing it again and the laugh in her voice as she told it.
"That was when she knew I was too smart to be a soldier. Willing to follow the letter of the law but not the spirit when it suited me."
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He squeezes Bull's hand lightly, affectionately, and chances leaning a little into his side. Bull's smile is encouraging, and puts him in a lighter mood. "Your tamassran--how long were you with her before you moved on? Did you see her at all after?" He's curious as to whether the Qun would allow that sort of lingering familial bond. Because the way Bull talks about her, she wasn't just his nanny. She might as well have been a parent.
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He thinks, briefly, of Kirkwall. What a mess. Bull smiles though as he thinks about his tamassran.
"We had two," he admits. "But I was closer to the younger one. I was with her from birth until they sent me off for training, but I still saw her fairly frequently until I went to Seheron. I wrote to her. I saw her briefly when I was sent back, before they reassigned me to the south."
He remembers hoping that she would never be assigned to any of the colonies on Seheron. Bull still writes to her, though not as often, if only to keep track of her whereabouts. It comforts him to know that she is safe and that in some part of the world, things make sense.
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He nods along, rubs a thumb across Bull's knuckles. A small gesture of comfort. It's difficult to miss someone you won't see again.
"And how long was it?" He asks. "Before you were sent off for training? Is it the same age for everyone, or do you all get dispersed depending upon how well-prepared you are?" If Dorian really thought about it, he's certain he could ask a thousand questions about Qunari life--about Bull's life, in particular. He can't help but wonder how many people know even this much about him. "Did they know right away what sort of job you'd have with the Ben-Hassrath?"
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His superiors saw what he was good at and made extensive notes on what he could do, what value he could bring, to a place like Seheron. His ability to get along with people, the way he gathers information, remembers it, uses it. His leadership skills and his willingness to work around hard rules when he needs to. His dedication to the Qun and his people. All of it worked together to get him to where he is.
"Antaam and Ben-Hassrath kids are usually that age when we go off. Bakers, cooks, farmers, craftspeople - they all get apprenticeships when they're a little younger."
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But Seheron at such a young age--Bull couldn't have been far past twenty when he first set foot on the island with his assignment. It makes Dorian's stomach churn to think of. At that age he'd been getting blind drunk in brothels, having sex anywhere and with any man he wanted, willfully engaging in duels, and making a general ass of himself. Seheron was barely on the periphery of his awareness, something he only thought about when the subject cropped up at particularly boring dinners.
He feels, not for the first time, a great deal of shame on behalf of the spoiled little shit he'd been. Bull had been fighting for his life and his sanity while Dorian wasted money on drink, complained about the intelligence of his peers, and then sucked them off anyway in back rooms and dark hallways, only to pretend afterward that they'd never been introduced. His father deserved it, of course, every embarrassment he'd caused him; but these days, Dorian can't look back and actually like that pompous, ignorant young man. But he can learn from him, at least. Be better.
"You were so young," he says quietly, looks up at Bull with plain sympathy and more than a little concern, though the latter is two decades too late. "And they decided that you were the man they wanted on the ground in that shithole?"
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Bull smiles faintly. "I did well. Uncovered a few smuggling operations, found discontents. Rooted out a whole Tevinter spy ring. That's what got me posted to Seheron. They needed someone intelligent enough to find spies, charming enough to win over natives, and-- brutal. Someone that could survive. I guess I was twenty one? Wasn't hard to rise through the ranks. I was good at my job and people died or got reassigned to avoid real burn out."
He was good. An unshakable comrade, a ruthless hunter, fair with the natives, and sharply clever.
"Usual tour of duty is two years. I was there for about eight." Bull looks down at his hands, one holding Dorian's and the other missing a couple of fingertips. "Kind of liked it when the Vints showed up every year. Made things feel straightforward."
Fighting Tevinter soldiers and mages was its own kind of hell, but at least Bull knew who he enemy was in those incursions.
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But to hear of the extent of Bull's successful career with the Ben-Hassrath is sobering. Dorian has known for quite some time now that the Bull must be one of the most intelligent men he's ever known; it's one of his most attractive qualities, right up there with the mass of his biceps. This only serves to confirm that assumption--as well as the assumption that his long tour of duty on Seheron had been the exception rather than the rule. It's difficult to fathom what he must have had to endure there in all the time.
Instead of broaching that depressing topic, he asks another question.
"Hissrad?" Dorian repeats the unfamiliar word, brow furrowing. "Is that your...title? Under the Qun?" He's never heard it, if Bull has any other name apart from the Iron Bull. But he must, he realizes. Or at least, he must in so far as Qunari have things they call one another.
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Liar something in him whispers. As apt a translation as any. Maybe less refined. Bull doesn't use it if he has a choice. He doesn't lie. He lets people believe what they want to. It's different. It's easy to get caught lying; less easy to be caught playing along with what people already assume is true.
"I got it while I was still in Par Vollen. For a while I didn't really have anything. My tama called me Ashkaari but that means someone who knows, and everyone in the Ben-Hassrath knows things. Not enough to serve as a differentiation."
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Their fingers are still wound together, palms flat. Himself and--Ashkaari, Hissrad, the Iron Bull. Maker, that's a lot to keep up with. He knows, at least, the he doesn't want to let go. That will have to be enough.
"You've had a number of descriptive monikers, it seems," Dorian comments. "So have I, I suppose, but only one of them is my name." He smiles faintly. "I'm sure it comes as no surprise, but for you, I like the Iron Bull best." He squeezes Bull's hand, leaning into him as he tilts his chin up. For a fleeting moment he wonders if he could chance a kiss here. He wants to. Wants to communicate to Bull how much he cares for him exactly as he is, and how grateful he is that he's shared these things with him. Dorian isn't the sort to say such things plainly. But he thinks that a kiss may not be right, either. There's something almost selfish about that desire, and he doesn't want to examine it too closely.
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He smiles small and shrugs one shoulder when Dorian points out the titles he'd gone through. "I couldn't stay Hissrad when I came here," he admits. "He's known in Seheron and if I waltzed around Orlais using that name, someone would put the pieces together eventually. Especially Tevinter agents. Besides, all Tal-Vashoth pick a name for themselves. It's an important part of breaking with the Qun."
Some days Bull worries that he has been The Iron Bull too long. He writes letters to Par Vollen with perfect devotion because he knows what his people have done for him. He is not a traitor. He is not Tal-Vashoth.
But the Bull is just another title. He comforts himself in that, even if he had to choose it for himself.
He looks down at Dorian and he can't help but smile when he sees the look on the mage's face. Bull leans down to give him a kiss, lingering until he feels Dorian start to pull away.
"Qunari don't have names. But I can see the appeal."
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To distract himself, Dorian picks up his bowl again. What's left of his dinner is colder than he'd like, but a small fire rune drawn on the side of the bowl fixes that quickly enough. When the stew is steaming again, he raises a spoonful to his mouth.
"But you've got one," he points out, tries for lighthearted without being blithe. "Or am I mistaken? Should I stop moaning Bull in bed?" His smirk is as teasing as it is provocative.
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